An oil feed pump for feeding oil in an oil tank to an engine, an oil recovery pump for feeding oil in a crankcase into the oil tank, an oil drain pipe connected to the lower portion of the crankcase and extending upward, and an opening provided on top of the oil tank are provided in a lubrication system. An opening of the oil drain pipe opens at the position upward of the oil level in the crankcase at a moment when the oil in the oil tank is returned into the crankcase. A cap is provided with a dip stick. The engine can be mounted on a small planing boat with the crankshaft oriented in the fore-and-aft direction. The oil tank is integrally formed with the front portion of the engine so as to be elongated in the vertical direction and is formed with the opening on top.
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1. An engine comprising:
a crankcase;
an oil tank being provided independently of an interior of the crankcase and having oil therein;
an oil feed pump for feeding oil in the oil tank to the engine, wherein oil used for lubricating parts of the engine is collected within said crankcase;
an oil recovery pump for feeding oil in the crankcase to said oil tank;
an oil drain pipe connected to a lower portion of said crankcase and extending upwardly therefrom and having an opening at an upper portion thereof;
a cap, wherein said cap is operatively connected to the opening at the upper portion of said drain pipe; and
an oil tank opening provided on an upper portion of said oil tank.
9. A lubrication system for an engine having a crankcase, said lubrication system comprising:
an oil tank being provided independently of an interior of the crankcase and having oil therein;
an oil feed pump for feeding oil in the oil tank to the engine, wherein oil used for lubricating parts of the engine is collected within said crankcase;
an oil recovery pump for feeding oil in the crankcase to said oil tank;
an oil drain pipe connected to a lower portion of said crankcase and extending upwardly therefrom and having an opening at an upper portion thereof;
a cap, wherein said cap is operatively connected to the opening at an upper portion of said drain pipe; and
an oil tank opening provided on an upper portion of said oil tank.
5. A small planning boat, said small planning boat comprising:
an engine mounted on the small planing boat with a crankshaft thereof oriented in a fore-and-aft direction of the boat, wherein said engine further includes
a crankcase;
an oil tank being provided independently of an interior of the crankcase and having oil therein;
an oil feed pump for feeding oil in the oil tank to the engine, wherein oil used for lubricating parts of the engine is collected within said crankcase;
an oil recovery pump for feeding oil in the crankcase to said oil tank;
an oil drain pipe connected to a lower portion of said crankcase and extending upwardly therefrom and having an opening at an upper portion thereof;
a cap, wherein said cap is operatively connected to the opening at the upper portion of said drain pipe; and
an oil tank opening provided on an upper portion of said oil tank, wherein said oil tank is integrally formed with a front portion of the engine and elongated in a vertical direction.
2. The engine according to
3. The engine according to
4. The engine according to
6. The boat according to
7. The boat according to
8. The boat according to
10. The lubrication system according to
11. The lubrication system according to
12. The lubrication system according to
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This nonprovisional application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §119(a) on Patent Application No. 2001-365802 filed in Japan on Nov. 30, 2001, the entirety of which is herein incorporated by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a lubrication unit for engines, and more particularly to a lubrication unit for engines suitable for mounting on a planing watercraft such as a small planning boat.
2. Description of the Background Art
As seen in
The aforementioned engine 1 is mounted on the small planing boat 2. Since there is only a slight space between an engine bottom 1a and a bottom of the vessel body 2a, one has to remove the aforementioned cap 6, insert a tube for sucking oil from the opening 3a, and drain the oil when changing engine oil. Therefore, the present inventors have determined that the oil in the oil tank 3 can be drained relatively satisfactorily. However, the oil in the crankcase 4 cannot be drained easily and/or satisfactorily with this arrangement of the background art.
The present invention overcomes the shortcomings associated with the background art and achieves other advantages not realized by the background art.
An object of the present invention is to provide a lubrication unit for engines in which the aforementioned problems of the background art are solved, e.g., oil residing within an engine can be changed easily and satisfactorily.
One or more of these and other objects are accomplished by an engine comprising a crankcase; an oil tank being provided independently of an interior of the crankcase and having oil therein; an oil feed pump for feeding oil in the oil tank to the engine, wherein oil used for lubricating parts of the engine is collected within the crankcase; an oil recovery pump for feeding oil in the crankcase to the oil tank; an oil drain pipe connected to a lower portion of the crankcase and extending upwardly therefrom; and an opening provided on an upper portion of the oil tank.
One or more of these and other objects are further accomplished by a small planning boat, the small planning boat comprising an engine mounted on the small planing boat with a crankshaft thereof oriented in a fore-and-aft direction of the boat, wherein the engine further includes a crankcase; an oil tank being provided independently of an interior of the crankcase and having oil therein; an oil feed pump for feeding oil in the oil tank to the engine, wherein oil used for lubricating parts of the engine is collected within the crankcase; an oil recovery pump for feeding oil in the crankcase to the oil tank; an oil drain pipe connected to a lower portion of the crankcase and extending upwardly therefrom; and an opening provided on an upper portion of the oil tank, wherein the oil tank is integrally formed with a front portion of the engine and elongated in a vertical direction.
One or more of these and other objects are further accomplished by a lubrication system for an engine having a crankcase, the lubrication system comprising an oil tank being provided independently of an interior of the crankcase and having oil therein; an oil feed pump for feeding oil in the oil tank to the engine, wherein oil used for lubricating parts of the engine is collected within the crankcase; an oil recovery pump for feeding oil in the crankcase to the oil tank; an oil drain pipe connected to a lower portion of the crankcase and extending upwardly therefrom; and an opening provided on an upper portion of the oil tank.
Since the lubrication unit for engines includes an oil drain pipe connected to the lower portion of the aforementioned crankcase and extending upward, and an opening provided on top of the aforementioned oil tank, the oil in the oil tank can be drained by inserting a tube for drawing oil from the opening on top of the oil tank when changing oil. The oil in the crankcase can be drained by inserting a tube for drawing oil from the opening of the oil drain pipe. According to this lubrication unit for engines, oil changes can be performed easily and satisfactorily, especially when the engine is mounted on the small planing boat and there is no working space between the engine bottom and the ship bottom. Oil changes can be performed easily and satisfactorily from a position above the engine.
Since the lubrication unit for engines in an oil lubrication unit for engines is constructed in such a manner that the opening of the aforementioned oil drain pipe is opening at a position above the oil level in the crankcase at the moment when the oil in the oil tank is returned into the crankcase, the following additional effects are achieved. When the engine is left standing for a long period of time, the oil in the oil tank may gradually be returned into the crankcase through the oil pump (oil recovery pump or oil feed pump). For example, assuming that the opening of the oil drain pipe opens downward of the oil level in the crankcase, there arises such problem that the oil leaks when the cap clogging the opening is removed. Since the opening of the oil drain pipe opens upward of the oil level in the crankcase at the moment when the oil in the oil tank returns into the crankcase, leakage of oil when the cap is removed from opening after the engine is left standing may be avoided.
Since the lubrication unit for engines is constructed in such a manner that the opening on top of the aforementioned oil tank permits the dip stick to be inserted and pulled out, and the opening of the aforementioned oil drain pipe is free to insert and pull out the dip stick as well, the following additional effects may be achieved. When the engine is left stand for a long time, the oil in the oil tank may gradually be returned into the crankcase through the oil pump. In such a case, the normal method of measurement, e.g., a method of measurement by the use of the dip stick provided on the cap clogging the aforementioned opening of the oil tank, suffers from the problem of the quantity of oil not being capable of being checked, including the presence or absence of oil.
In contrast, with the lubrication unit according to the present invention, the quantity of oil can be checked by inserting the dip stick through the opening of the oil drain pipe. Even when the engine is left standing for a long period of time, the presence or absence of oil and the approximate oil quantity can be checked before starting the engine.
Since the lubrication unit for the engine mounted on the small planing boat with the crankshaft thereof oriented in the fore-and-aft direction, and the oil tank is integrally formed with the front portion of the engine so as to be elongated in the vertical direction and is formed with the opening on top thereof, the oil can be easily drained by inserting the tube for drawing oil through the opening on top of the vertically elongated oil tank. Therefore, oil changes can be performed easily and satisfactorily from a position above the vessel body.
Further scope of applicability of the present invention will become apparent from the detailed description given hereinafter. However, it should be understood that the detailed description and specific examples, while indicating preferred embodiments of the invention, are given by way of illustration only, since various changes and modifications within the spirit and scope of the invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art from this detailed description.
The present invention will become more fully understood from the detailed description given hereinafter and the accompanying drawings which are given by way of illustration only, and thus are not limitative of the present invention, and wherein:
FIG. 9(a) is a plan view of a tank body according to an embodiment of the present invention;
FIG. 9(b) is a front view of the tank body of the present invention;
FIG. 9(c) is a cross sectional view taken along the line c—c in the FIG. 9(b);
FIG. 9(d) is a cross sectional view taken along the line d—d in the FIG. 9(a);
FIG. 11(a) is a cross sectional view taken along the line e—e in FIG. 9(b);
FIG. 11(b) is a cross sectional view taken along the line f—f in FIG. 9(b);
FIG. 12(a) is a plan view of a cover according to an embodiment of the present invention;
FIG. 12(b) is a cross sectional view taken along the line b—b in FIG. 12(a);
FIG. 12(c) is a cross sectional view taken along the line c—c in FIG. 12(a); and
FIG. 12(d) is a cross sectional view taken along the line d—d in FIG. 12(a);
FIG. 13(a) is a rear view of the cover according to an embodiment of the present invention;
FIG. 13(b) is a view seen in the direction indicated by the arrow b in FIG. 13(a); FIG. 13(c) is a cross sectional view taken along the line c—c in FIG. 13(a);
The present invention will hereinafter be described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
As seen in
The jet pump 30 includes a flow path 33 extending from a water intake 17 opening on the boat bottom to the jet port 31 opening at the rear end of the vessel body and a deflector 32. The jet pump 30 also includes an impeller 34 disposed in the flow path 33, wherein a drive shaft 35 of the impeller 34 is connected to an output shaft 21 of the engine 20. When the impeller 34 is rotated by the engine 20, water drawn through the water intake 17 is emitted from the jet port 31 through the deflector 32, thereby propelling the vessel body 11. The revolutions of the engine 20 and a resulting a propulsion force generated by the jet pump 30 are controlled by rotating a throttle lever 13a (See
In the preferred embodiment, the engine 20 is a DOHC type, water-cooled, in-line, four-cylinder, dry sump, four-cycle engine. As shown in FIG. 1 and in
As shown in FIG. 6 and
As seen in
As shown in FIG. 4 through
FIG. 9(a) is a plan view of a tank body according to an embodiment of the present invention. FIG. 9(b) is a front view of the tank body of the present invention. FIG. 9(c) is a cross sectional view taken along the line c—c in the FIG. 9(b). FIG. 9(d) is a cross sectional view taken along the line d—d in the FIG. 9(a).
As shown in
As shown in
The tank body 60 described above is joined to the front surface of the engine 20 on the joint surface 61 so as to cover the aforementioned respective portions with the cover section 66, and integrally secured on the front surface of the engine 20 with bolts (not shown). The tank body 60 is mounted on the front surface of the engine 20 after an oil pump 80 and an oil cooler 90 that will be described later are mounted thereon.
As shown in FIG. 8 and
The oil pump 80 is mounted on the front surface of the tank body 60 by joining a joint surface 81a for the tank body 60 on the first case 81 to a joint surface 69 on the front surface (See FIGS. 9(b) (c)) of the oil tank body 60 formed in identical shape thereto. A bolt 88 is then inserted (See
As shown in
The oil cooler 90 is mounted on the mounting section 64 on the tank body 60 by connecting the inlet pipe 92 to the upper hole 64a of the tank body 60 and the exit pipe 93 to the lower hole 64b of the tank body 60, and fastening the aforementioned flange sections 94, 95 with bolts (not shown). In
A cooling water introducing pipe 97 in communication with a hole 64c (See FIG. 9 and
As shown in
When the tank body 60 and the cover 70 are joined, the oil storage sections 65, 75 of each of the tank body 60 and the cover 70 define a single, vertically elongated oil storage section. An oil filter 100 is mounted on a mounting section 68 for the oil filter 100 on the tank body 60. As described above, the oil tank 50 or tank body 60 and the cover 70 including the oil pump 80, the oil cooler 90, and the relief valve 130 built therein are mounted on the front surface of the engine 20. The oil filter 100 is mounted and an oil passage as described below is formed.
As shown in FIG. 5 and
Likewise, a recovered oil discharge path 53 is defined by the front surface of the tank body 60 and the back surface of the first case 81 of the oil pump 80. The recovered oil discharge path 53 is defined by an oil passage 53a (See FIG. 9(b)) formed on the side of the tank body 60 and a recovered oil discharge port 810 formed on the side of the first case 81 on the oil pump 80 so as to face toward the oil passage 53a.
The upper end 53b of the recovered oil discharge port 53 opens into the oil tank 50, e.g., into the oil storage section (See FIG. 9(b), FIG. 15). As shown in
The lower end 55a of the discharge path 55 is in communication with a feed oil discharge port 82o of the oil feed pump, and the upper end 55b laterally passes through the upper portion of the first case 81 and then in communication with a lateral hole 60a formed on the tank body 60 (See FIG. 9(b), FIG. 15). The lateral hole 60a is in communication with the vertical hole 60b formed also on the tank body 60 as shown in
A mounting hole 82a for the aforementioned relief valve 130 opens into the aforementioned discharge path 55, and the relief valve 130 is mounted into the mounting hole 82a in a manner described above. As shown in
The mounting section 68 is integrally formed with a peripheral wall 68a, and an oil receiving section 68c is defined by the peripheral wall 68a and a side wall surface 68b of the tank body 60 continuing therefrom. Therefore, oil that may drop when the oil filter 100 is attached to or detached from the mounting section 68 is received by the oil receiving section 68c, and is returned into the oil tank though the aforementioned female screw hole 60d or through the opening 60c, and thus the inside of the vessel body is protected from the contamination by oil.
As shown in FIGS. 9(a), (b), and
The feed paths 60j,k for the balancers 114 (L,R) are in communication with the oil distribution path 60h via a narrow path 60m respectively. One end 60h1 of the oil distribution path 60h is closed by a plug 60n (See FIG. 6). The oil fed from the oil cooler 90 to the main gallery 20a of the engine 20 returns to a crankcase 28 after being fed to the each part of the engine, and the oil returned into the crankcase 28 is recovered through the pipe 52, the recovery path 51, the oil pump 80 (recovery pump), the recovered oil discharge path 53 into the oil tank 50, and is circulated from the aforementioned intake path 54 along the path described above.
The aforementioned oil filling port 72 (See
As shown in FIG. 5 and
In
Therefore, according to this lubrication oil for engines, oil changing can be performed easily and satisfactorily. When the engine 20 is mounted on the small planing boat 10 and there is no working space between the engine bottom and the ship bottom 14a (See FIG. 4), oil changing can be performed easily and satisfactorily by the operation from above the engine 20. Since the opening 44 of the oil drain pipe 43 is opening at the position upwardly of the oil level O1 in the crankcase 28 at the moment when the oil in the oil tank 50 is returned into the crankcase 28 as is described in conjunction with
When the engine 20 is left standing for a long period of time, the oil in the oil tank 50 may gradually be returned into the crankcase 28 through the oil pump, e.g., oil recovery pump or oil feed pump. In such a case, assuming that the opening 44 of the oil drain pipe 43 is opened below the oil level O1 (see phantom line O1 in the same figure) in the crankcase 28 after the engine 20 was left standing for a long period of time as shown in
In the lubrication unit for engines in this embodiment, as shown in
In
As shown in
With the lubrication unit of this embodiment, the oil quantity can be checked by inserting the dip stick 79a through the opening 44 of the oil drain pipe 43, e.g., the presence or absence of oil can also be checked. Even when the engine 20 is left standing for a long period of time, the presence or absence of oil and the approximate oil quantity can be checked before starting the engine.
In order to measure the oil quantity relatively accurately, the oil quantity (see oil level O2′) can be checked relatively accurately by inserting the dip stick 79a through the opening 72 on top of the oil tank after operation of the engine for a prescribed period of time. Since the engine 20 is an engine to be mounted on the small planing boat 10 with the crankshaft 21 thereof oriented in the fore-and-aft direction, and the oil tank 50 is integrally formed with the front portion of the engine 20 so as to be elongated in the vertical direction and is formed with the aforementioned opening 72 on top thereof, as shown in
In
The invention being thus described, it will be obvious that the same may be varied in many ways. Such variations are not to be regarded as a departure from the spirit and scope of the invention, and all such modifications as would be obvious to one skilled in the art are intended to be included within the scope of the following claims.
Tsuchiya, Masahiko, Hoi, Yosuke, Noda, Yoshiaki
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Executed on | Assignor | Assignee | Conveyance | Frame | Reel | Doc |
Nov 25 2002 | Honda Giken Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha | (assignment on the face of the patent) | / | |||
Dec 19 2002 | HOI, YOSUKE | Honda Giken Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 013739 | /0772 | |
Dec 20 2002 | TSUCHIYA, MASAHIKO | Honda Giken Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 013739 | /0772 | |
Dec 26 2002 | NODA, YOSHIAKI | Honda Giken Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 013739 | /0772 |
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